What is 'Meed"?

'Meed' is a word meaning "a just or deserved reward". Meed Partners focuses on SPM, ICM, and Sales Operations, providing strategic consultation, bespoke design, development and delivery. Meed's animating focus is to continuously elevate the value proposition in this market.

Products

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Choosing an SPM Vendor

It was my pleasure, last month, to attend the recent World at Work Focus on Sales Compensation 2017 event in Chicago for Meed Partners. There were many new offerings. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen the market as vibrant as it is now, and it occurred to me that companies must be having a very difficult time choosing a product/service. That’s why I’ll share from my few decades of experience on the subject.

Before thinking about choosing an SPM product you should deeply understand your reasons for entering the market. Without a clear conception of your goals it will be difficult to assess the relative value of the solutions being offered. Remember, of course, that organizational questions of capability, maturity, governance cannot be ignored.

Value has two components - that you got what you needed, and that what you paid is a competitive price. I mention this so as not to lose sight of the fact that, if you get things you won’t use for a very nice price, what really have you gotten? Read on, honorable friend. There's a lot of content here, perhaps a cup of coffee would help.

Position Design

Automating Variable Compensation: Getting the most out of your Position Design

In variable compensation it is very common to see reference to an entity called ‘position’. A position is a capacity/role in which a payee functions and for which they receive compensation. A position often has a name, (like ‘Director of Advanced Widget Sales Northeast’) and a title (like ‘Director’). Positions often too have a life of their own, that, for example, the Director of Advanced Widget Sales Northeast exists independently of whether Sue or Tom is holding the role. It may even be empty for a time, but like a physical chair, it does not disintegrate when the sitter stands up. Object constancy, and all that.

These position objects are often related to one another, for example that the position ‘Director of Advanced Widget Sales Northeast’ reports to the Vice President of Sales Northeast, or perhaps to the VP of US Widget Sales. This relationship usually looks like a hierarchy, but there are cases where it is more a filtered matrix of some sort, or really it can be as rich and nuanced as the imagination. It is important to model both positions and their relations accurately to get correct compensation and good analytics.

Hard Problems in Automating Variable Compensation - A Phantasmagoria

When we speak of hard problems in automating variable compensation we are not speaking of cold fusion. Hard problems in variable compensation usually consist of delivering solutions for cases that

1. are outrageously demanding of computational resources2. have complexity that would shame the famousRubeGoldberg3. are radically riddled with exceptions4. All of the above

What follows is a little list, we'll keep it live, of things that have proved difficult. Sometimes there is a best practice (like "Don't do that!") that will save one from the pitfall. Othertimes seemingly not.

Flexibility in Automating Variable Compensation

One of many topics in the realm of automating variable compensation that deserves extended examination is how to harvest the benefit of flexibility. While this is a very important thing to get right, it so often falls to the bottom of priority lists and at the end of the day leaves C-level management feeling under-served. There are a few ways to think about flexibility. First, is your compensation plan definition and communication prepared organizationally and legally to support multiple changes in a year? This may or may not be a goal, but some think of flexibility as being able to make changes now, not waiting till the next plan year. Another way to think about it is the ability to design and deploy very different structures and methods (rapidly) - and ideally without losing important analytical history. Again, such may not be your particular goal, but, like yoga, flexbility brings other benefits. When you are very flexible small changes are not big deals because the preparedness for change is embedded end to end in your implementation.

Automating Variable Compensation

Automating Variable Compensation - an Overview in Q and A form

What is it?

For the last twenty years, when asked what I do, I've cheerfully replied "I automate Variable Compensation". Wrinkled brows, blank stares, and courteous inquiry usually follow. I end up saying "You know, big companies have salespersons who get paid more or less depending on what they sell - commissions, bonuses, draw, etc.". Eventually the general idea is communicated. Usually saying something about how big the market is helps, pointing out that the volume of this variable compensation often exceeds a billion dollars for given industry leaders. The majority of folks have never much thought about what the cost of sales adds up to be.

This practice, of automating variable compensation, has traced its way through the markets as EIM (Enterpise Incentive Management), ICM (Incentive Compensation Management), SPM (Sales Performance Management) and will undoubtedly sprout new acronyms as the old ones lose fashion. Dynamically continuous variable incentivization? We have not seen the most amusing chapters, that much is sure. I'd like to call it VCA, because that's just so cut and dry.